Accuracy School — A year in the life of the Northwest School of Wooden Boatbuilding by Lawrence W. Cheek

Building an Amesbury Skiff, Part 2 — A classic outboard-powered boat, in oak, locust, and cedar by Graham McKay

The Boat Shower — A practical, minimalist solution by Nat Benjamin

Cover: During the summer of 2014, the 1841 whaleship CHARLES W. MORGAN set sail on her first voyage in almost 90 years. In the final phase of her restoration, she was completely rerigged with cotton canvas sails and hemp and manila cordage. Photograph by Dennis Murphy/Mystic Seaport Museum

Getting Started in Boats Supplement Insert to WoodenBoat Magazine — Digital versions available at The WoodenBoat Store.

GRAYHOUND’s Encore — The rebirth of a lug-rigged privateer by Patrick Holian

The Shipwright’s Adze — Mastering a classic edge tool by Mark Jaquith

The Geometry of Rowing — Or: Why do I need a sliding seat for that nice wherry? by John Harris

Building an Amesbury Skiff — Part 1 — A classic outboard-powered boat, in oak, locust, and cedar by Graham McKay

Cover: Graham McKay, director of Lowell’s Boat Shop in Amesbury, Massachusetts, takes a break from sea trials in a newly launched 16′ Amesbury Skiff. Graham and his crew built the boat for a how-to-build series beginning with this issue. See page 72. Photograph by Ali Goodwin

Getting Started in Boats Supplement Insert to WoodenBoat Magazine — Digital versions available at The WoodenBoat Store.

WoodenBoat 239, July/August 2014

A Modern Traditional Boatbuilder — The long career of Louis Sauzedde by Jay Picotte

A Tiller Control — Short-term self-steering by Harry Bryan

The Master of Lines — The worldwide reach of Johan Anker by Elin Kragset Vold and Ole Engen

VARG — Restoring a 1927 Johan Anker 8-Meter by Bruce Stannard

Return of a Dragon — The careful restoration of HUBRIS by Bill Jacobs

ALBATROSS — Taking a much-loved lobsteryacht into the future by Walter Ansel

ADVENTURE at Sea — After a long, hard reconstruction, a 1926 Gloucesterman sails again by Randall Peffer

Cover: The 8-Meter class sloop VARG, launched in 1924 by the Anker & Jensen yard of Oslo, Norway, was recently rebuilt by Wilson Bros. of Tasmania. See page 48 for a profile of designer Johan Anker, and page 62 for the story of VARG’s resurrection.Photograph by Kraig Carlström

Getting Started in Boats Supplement Insert to WoodenBoat Magazine — Digital versions available at The WoodenBoat Store.

A Schooner for East Texas — The 20-year construction of BRADNA ROSE by Jonathan Weinstein

Going Steady, Going Fast — The powerboat racing team of Harold and Lorna Wilson by John Summers

Chasing the Tide by Peter Neill

Remembering the Schooner NIÑA — Part 2: Her latter years by Richard “Deke” Ulian

How to Build Phoenix III — Part 3: A versatile, easy-to-build 15-footer by Ross Lillistone

Cover: In 1932, Chester Clement of Mount Desert Island, Maine, built this shapely boat for winter lobstering and summer chartering. MADDY SUE (ex-TRAILAWAY), which has been recently restored, proved highly influential in the development of picnic boats.Photograph by Benjamin Mendlowitz

Getting Started in BoatsSupplement Insert to WoodenBoat Magazine — Digital versions available at The WoodenBoat Store.

Cordage — Cordage is critical to the operation of every boat, and serves a variety of roles onboardby Jan Adkins

WoodenBoat 237, March/April 2014

A Schooner for Miss Dolan — Creating DEFIANCE for a strong-willed yachtswoman by Bill Peterson

SPARTINA — A lobsterboat-style Great Lakes cruiser by George D. Jepson

Remembering the Schooner NIÑA — Part 1: Her early years by Richard Dey

Thumper’s World — An inspired waterman, a 100-year-old schooner, and the notorious Delaware Bay by Randall Peffer

The Return of the Giant-Slayer — The schooner CORAL OF COWES by Nic Compton

Aboard TOLKA — A limousine launch for Muskoka by Timothy Du Vernet

The Ghosts in the Rossie Mill — by Stan Grayson

How to Build Phoenix III, Part 2 — A versatile, easy-to-build 15-footer by Ross Lillistone

Cover: CORAL OF COWES is well suited to Caribbean and European charters, which she has done since 2011. Largely original in all but her rig (she was launched as a yawl in 1902), the storied British yacht lay dormant for decades until a restoration was completed in 2005.Photograph by Nic Compton

How to Build Phoenix III, Part 1 — A versatile, easy-to-build 15-footer by Ross Lillistone

TACOMA — How an American tuna clipper changed the face of Australian fishing by Bruce Stannard

Cover: On Maine’s Chickawaukie Pond, Bill Buchholz gets a running start with his Monotype XV iceboat. He built the boat to a design that originated in Estonia before World War II.Photograph by Alison Langley